This king, anyway!!
Hello! I am SillyString, current chief justice and long time member of the court. I have written a number of rulings during my terms which I am quite proud of.
I do not like to campaign for policy objectives that I will pursue as justice, because I think the Court is not a body which can or should seek specific changes. Rather, it should respond to those matters which are brought before it.
However, one thing I would like to highlight from the previous term is a change that we (Eluvatar and I, as Limerick unfortunately was not able to serve the full term) adopted. In an effort to clarify the principles behind standing, we chose to include a section on how each petitioner who was granted a request for review was determined to have standing to bring the case.
We chose to do this because the ruling which defines standing is very short and lacks detail, which has led to confusion over the years about when or why someone is qualified to file a request for review. Every time the court acts to accept or deny such a request it creates precedent around standing, but there is no formal codification of those decisions and it is difficult for future courts, or petitioners, to go back and reference that again.
It is our hope that specifically acknowledging standing within the decision on a review will help make an understanding of this idea more accessible to future courts and to all citizens.
This has not been codified in the court rules, though that could be done in the future.
I welcome your questions, comments, and concerns!!
Hello! I am SillyString, current chief justice and long time member of the court. I have written a number of rulings during my terms which I am quite proud of.
I do not like to campaign for policy objectives that I will pursue as justice, because I think the Court is not a body which can or should seek specific changes. Rather, it should respond to those matters which are brought before it.
However, one thing I would like to highlight from the previous term is a change that we (Eluvatar and I, as Limerick unfortunately was not able to serve the full term) adopted. In an effort to clarify the principles behind standing, we chose to include a section on how each petitioner who was granted a request for review was determined to have standing to bring the case.
We chose to do this because the ruling which defines standing is very short and lacks detail, which has led to confusion over the years about when or why someone is qualified to file a request for review. Every time the court acts to accept or deny such a request it creates precedent around standing, but there is no formal codification of those decisions and it is difficult for future courts, or petitioners, to go back and reference that again.
It is our hope that specifically acknowledging standing within the decision on a review will help make an understanding of this idea more accessible to future courts and to all citizens.
This has not been codified in the court rules, though that could be done in the future.
I welcome your questions, comments, and concerns!!